| The fact is that Pennsylvania's Republicans are a bunch of morans. There's a simple decision function that decides whether to primary a so-called "moderate" within one's own party. It goes something like this:
If your "moderate" is in hostile territory, defend them. If your "moderate" is in friendly territory, primary them and get a "purer" candidate.
That's a pretty simple equation. In Pennsylvania, where Democrats hold a voter registration edge of over 1 million votes and where Obama racked up a huge margin of victory, a Republican challenge to their own incumbent is political suicide. Whether Specter had switched or fallen in the Primary is irrelevant: derailing him is the functional equivalent of handing the Senate seat over to the Democratic Party. In fact, given Pat Toomey inevitable spanking at the polls in 2010, Specter's switch is about as good an outcome as Republicans could possibly hope for.
On the other hand, had Arlen Specter been from, say, Oklahoma, it would be a very different picture. In that case, the republican Party would be smart to punish Specter for his many betrayals of their fundamentalist "principles". Of course, the GOP's problem is that they've pretty much already purged every moderate in solidly conservative districts--and many like Specter and Chafee in liberal areas.
Ultimately, what this shows is the disparity not only in moral clarity but more importantly in political acumen between the progressive and the conservative base: the progressive base isn't stupid enough to primary, say, Ben Nelson in Nebraska or Mary Landrieu in Louisiana. We know that we'll take what we can get there.
But there's no reason we should have to put up with the shenanigans of Dianne Feinstein and Jane Harman here in deep blue California and Venice Beach. No reason at all.
And any Broderite who even starts to equate moves in California (or elsewhere in blue areas across the nation) to hold our squishes accountable, to the efforts of the Club for Growth in Pennsylvania, will only display a profound lack of political acumen. But then, that's entirely expected. Hence the pre-emptive strike. |